Academic work, like many other professional occupations, has increasingly become digitised. This book brings together leading scholars who examine the impacts, possibilities, politics and drawbacks of working in the contemporary university, using digital technologies. They span the fields of education, research administration, sociology, digital humanities, media and communication.
Academic work, like many other professional occupations, has increasingly become digitised. This book brings together leading scholars who examine the impacts, possibilities, politics and drawbacks of working in the contemporary university, using digital technologies. They span the fields of education, research administration, sociology, digital humanities, media and communication.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Deborah Lupton is Centenary Research Professor in the News and Media Research Centre, Faculty of Arts and Design at the University of Canberra, Australia. She is the author/co-author of 16 books, the latest of which are Digital Sociology (Routledge, 2015), The Quantified Self: A Sociology of Self-Tracking (Polity, 2016) and Digital Health: Critical Perspectives (Routledge, in press), and has also edited three further books. Deborah is the co-leader of the Digital Data and Society Consortium. Her blog is This Sociological Life and she tweets as @DALupton. Inger Mewburn is the Director of Research Training at the Australian National University, Canberra, Australia, where she is responsible for designing, measuring and evaluating centrally run research training initiatives and doing research on research candidature to improve experience. Inger blogs at www.thesiswhisperer.com. Pat Thomson PSM is Professor of Education, School of Education at the University of Nottingham, UK. She is the author/editor of eighteen books, the most recent being Inspiring School Change: Reforming Education Through the Creative Arts (2017, with Chris Hall, Routledge), Place Based methods for Researching schools (2016, with Chris Hall, Bloomsbury), Educational Leadership and Pierre Bourdieu (2017, Routledge) and Detox Your Writing: Strategies for Doctoral Researchers (with Barbara Kamler, Routledge 2016). She blogs about academic writing and research on patthomson.net and tweets as @ThomsonPat.
Inhaltsangabe
1. The digital academic: identities, contexts and politics 2. Towards an academic self? Blogging during the doctorate 3. Going from PhD to platform 4. Academic persona: the construction of online reputation in the modern academy 5. Academic Twitter and academic capital: collapsing orality and literacy in scholarly publics 6. Intersections online: academics who tweet 7. Sustaining Asian Australian scholarly activism online 8. Digital backgrounds, active foregrounds: student and teacher experiences with 'flipping the classroom' 9. A labour of love: a critical examination of the 'labour icebergs' of massive open online courses 10. Digital methods and data labs: the redistribution of educational research to education data science 11. Interview 12. Interview
1. The digital academic: identities, contexts and politics 2. Towards an academic self? Blogging during the doctorate 3. Going from PhD to platform 4. Academic persona: the construction of online reputation in the modern academy 5. Academic Twitter and academic capital: collapsing orality and literacy in scholarly publics 6. Intersections online: academics who tweet 7. Sustaining Asian Australian scholarly activism online 8. Digital backgrounds, active foregrounds: student and teacher experiences with 'flipping the classroom' 9. A labour of love: a critical examination of the 'labour icebergs' of massive open online courses 10. Digital methods and data labs: the redistribution of educational research to education data science 11. Interview 12. Interview
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